Police shut down illegal liquor distillery and arrest eleven suspects

PARKTOWN – The endeavours of the police in Gauteng continue to yield positive results as they have shut down an illegal micro distillery and arrested eleven suspects.

On Tuesday, 06 September 2022, the team consisting of members from Crime Intelligence, Provincial Investigation Unit, Ekurhuleni Trio Task Team, SAPS Katlehong, DPCI, Immigration Officers and Brand Protectors operationalised information about a group of people manufacturing illicit alcohol in Katlehong.

During the operation, illicit liqour with an estimated street value of R5 000 000 was discovered and eleven suspects, of which ten are suspected to be foreign nationals were arrested. The suspects will be processed by Department of Home Affairs.

The suspects will be charged with operating an illegal micro distillery, contravening the Liquor Act and unlawful possession of ethanol.

The concerted efforts of the teams involved are commendable and appreciable.

The public is urged to continue working together with police in the fight against crime by reporting any criminal activities on the Crime Stop Line 08600 10111 or leave anonymous tip-offs on My SAPS App which can be downloaded on any smart phone. All information received will be treated as strictly confidential.

Source: South African Police Service

Bogus doctor appears in Mahikeng court

NORTH WEST – Valery Sakidi Tshibanda (49) appeared before the Mmabatho Magistrate’s Court on Monday for contravention of the Health Professions Act 56 of 1974.

The investigation stems from a routine visit that was conducted by the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA) at a medical practice in Mahikeng. During the said visit, the accused was allegedly referred to as a medical student.

It later emerged that the accused was allegedly treating patients without being registered with the HPCSA. The members of the Hawks’ Serious Commercial Crime Investigation probed the matter further resulting in the accused being charged.

Tshibanda was released on R2000-00 bail and the matter was postponed to 03 October 2022 for further investigation.

Source: South African Police Service

Today’s load-shedding and GDP contraction announcements show SA is in socio-economic crisis

Statement by Cape Town Mayor, Geordin Hill-Lewis

Eskom’s announcement of further load-shedding until Saturday should deeply concern every South African.

The announcement was made only a few hours after news broke that the national economy contracted back to pre-pandemic size in the second quarter of this year. The national GDP contracted by 0,7% in Q2 in quarter-on-quarter terms, data showed.

This is, sadly, unsurprising. This year has seen the worst year of blackouts on record, at some of the highest “stages” ever. Each stage of load-shedding costs the national economy R500 million per stage per day; the two weeks of stage 6 load-shedding in late June/early July destroyed R4,2 billion worth of wealth per day.

Load-shedding is the single biggest driver of unemployment and therefore the single biggest driver of poverty. The more the national economy continues to bleed jobs and wealth, the further this acute socio-economic crisis will become a chronic and unfixable disaster.

In July, I proposed a 10-point plan to the President to immediately begin solving the power crisis. While certain of our proposals have been implemented, several important ones have not. This is disappointing news for every South African whose livelihood is affected by our country’s economic malaise.

In Cape Town, however, we do not believe in sitting around waiting for the national government to take bold and decisive action.

The City continues in its efforts to end load-shedding over time and bring down the cost of electricity for its customers. We are in the final stages of evaluating technical bids on our IPP tender, to bring new generation onto the grid. We have announced that commercial small-scale embedded generators (SSEGs) will now be able to sell on their excess electricity to the City for cash. Our pilot project for wheeling is under way and we are actively exploring options for storage to enable greater use of renewables in our energy mix.

Thankfully, we can announce that the City will once again be mitigating Eskom’s load-shedding for the benefit of its customers. There will be no load-shedding in Cape Town today and tomorrow while the rest of the country is on Stage 2.

Further announcements regarding mitigation up to the weekend — depending on the state of water reserves at Steenbras — will be made in due course.

Source: City Of Cape Town

South African GDP declines by 0.7%

After two consecutive quarters of positive growth, the country’s real gross domestic product (GDP) dropped by 0.7%1 in the second quarter of 2022, Statistics South Africa (Stats SA) said on Tuesday.

“The devastating floods in KwaZulu-Natal and load shedding contributed to the decline, weakening an already fragile national economy that had just recovered to pre-pandemic levels,” Stats SA explained.

Manufacturing

According to the national statistical service, manufacturing had the biggest drag on GDP due to flooding, which hurt several industries.

Manufacturing is the largest industry in KwaZulu-Natal, according to 2019 data, accounting for a fifth of national manufacturing production.

“The damage to factories and plants, and disruptions to logistics and supply chains, pulled national manufacturing output down by 5.9%.”

The biggest slump in growth was petroleum and chemical products, food and beverages, and transport equipment.

Trade

In addition, Stats SA said trade, catering and accommodation were negatively affected by the floods in KwaZulu-Natal and power cuts across the country.

The industry recorded a contraction of 1.5% as floods damaged retail outlets and storage facilities.

“There was also a loss of trading hours due to load shedding.”

Mining

Mining production was dragged lower by gold, coal and diamonds, with the decrease in coal production caused partly by the flooding, while the output was also dented by load shedding.

“Economic activity in the electricity, gas and water supply industry was hampered mainly by load shedding due to lack of generation capacity. There were disruptions to water supply too, caused by both the floods in KwaZulu-Natal and drought in Eastern Cape.”

Agriculture

Agriculture, forestry and fishing activities shrank by 7.7%, Stats SA said, pulled lower by a decrease in the production of animal products.

“Electricity outages and the spread of foot-and-mouth disease contributed to the decline.”

Real estate

On the upside, the finance, real estate and business service industries made the biggest positive impact on GDP growth in the second quarter of this year, rising by 2.4%.

“Growth was driven by increased activity in the banking sector, as well as in insurance and pension funding.”

COVID-19

According to Stats SA, the economy took almost two years to recover from the impact of COVID-19, with real GDP reaching pre-pandemic levels in the first quarter of 2022.

“The recovery was short-lived, with the 0.7% decline in the second quarter of 2022 dragging GDP back below the fourth quarter of 2019 pre-pandemic level of R1 148 billion.”

Stats SA said the story of recovery is more complicated when all industries are considered.

“Adopting the same methodology used in a recent article that compared South Africa’s COVID-19 recovery with other countries shows how long each industry took to recover to its fourth quarter of 2019 level, from the second quarter of 2020 when national economic activity was at its lowest.”

By the second quarter of this year, only four industries were at or above their pre-pandemic levels of production.

“After slumping in the second quarter of 2020, the finance, real estate and business services industry took two quarters to recover to its fourth quarter of 2019 level, while personal services took three quarters to get back on its feet.”

In terms of real value added, agriculture, forestry, fishing, and government seem to have weathered the pandemic relatively well.

“Six industries have not yet recovered, with construction currently in the worst shape. The construction industry is 24% smaller than it was before the pandemic.”

Source: South African Government News Agency

Sport, Arts and Culture launches the South African Geographical Names Database, 7 Sept

The Department of Sport, Arts and Culture invites members of the media to the Geographical Names Capacity building workshop on Wednesday, 7 September 2022. The South African Geographical Names Council (SAGNC) was established by the South African Geographical Names Council Act, 1998 (Act No.118 of 1998), as the body responsible for standardising geographical names in South Africa. The launch aims introduce the database of the new names that have been successfully implemented in the context of facilitating the promotion of a common national identity, social cohesion, and national healing.

This process was initiated in 1994 as an integral part of the overall transformation of the South African heritage landscape. The standardisation of geographical names seeks to rectify the historical perspective of geographical names, correct spelling mistakes, eradicate the geographical names duplication and affirm the history as well as identity of the province. The launch is scheduled to take place on 7 September 2022 at the National Library of South Africa.

Members of the media are invited as follows:

Date : Wednesday, 7 September 2022

Venue : National Library of SA

Time : 08:00

Source: Government of South Africa